Southgate has settled on a variation on a 3-5-2 system in the final few matches before the tournament, a formation that offers England tactical flexibility.

The first decision to make is who starts in-goal: Jordan Pickford is in possession of the shirt and his distribution is admired by Southgate, but Nick Pope and Jack Butland also have solid claims to the No 1 jersey.

Will you play a back three or a back four? Are you enamoured with John Stones' elegance in possession or distrustful of his ability to defend against the very best?

Does Gary Cahill's experience and medal collection earn him a place in your team or will you take a long-term perspective and pick the promising Harry Maguire? Did Trent Alexander-Arnold's impressive Champions League exploits give him an edge over Kieran Trippier? Decisions, decisions...

The cupboard is looking bare in central midfield with Eric Dier, Jordan Henderson, Fabian Delph and Ruben Loftus Cheek at your disposal, but things look brighter in attack with Dele Alli, Jesse Lingard and Raheem Sterling in contention to support Harry Kane.

Jamie Vardy, Marcus Rashford and Danny Welbeck are there if you want to mix things up and play with two strikers or you could go completely off script and play a different formation entirely.